Thanks, man. Yeah if RJ bounces back nicely, Oswalt stays injury free, and Mad Dog continues his stellar performance over the years, I think I'm pretty unstoppable pitching-wise. I wouldn't mind landing a toip close, but maybe I can do that off of FA in the coming months. I think my offense is pretty good too:

Looks very potent. I'd kind of like to pick up Jackson just in case he takes off but I will hold off on that for a while.

I picked up Vazquez, Carlos Zambrano, Livan Hernandez, Santana, and José Contreras. After the first two, I was like 'damn, I'm just going to go for the All-Hispanic team', none of them are really 'bad' and I'm not really disappointed in any of them. Should be plenty of K...if I could only get Riviera too!!!

Anonymous wrote:Looks very potent. I'd kind of like to pick up Jackson just in case he takes off but I will hold off on that for a while.

I picked up Vazquez, Carlos Zambrano, Livan Hernandez, Santana, and José Contreras. After the first two, I was like 'damn, I'm just going to go for the All-Hispanic team', none of them are really 'bad' and I'm not really disappointed in any of them. Should be plenty of K...if I could only get Riviera too!!!

God bless racist rednecks!! (or not)

98% of Americans have a favorable opinion of puppies and rainbows.
How do you spell "biased?"

Anonymous wrote:Looks very potent. I'd kind of like to pick up Jackson just in case he takes off but I will hold off on that for a while.

I picked up Vazquez, Carlos Zambrano, Livan Hernandez, Santana, and José Contreras. After the first two, I was like 'damn, I'm just going to go for the All-Hispanic team', none of them are really 'bad' and I'm not really disappointed in any of them. Should be plenty of K...if I could only get Riviera too!!!

I have Vlad, Magglio, Vasquez, Cabrera and Vasquez as my all spanish team.

Anonymous wrote:Looks very potent. I'd kind of like to pick up Jackson just in case he takes off but I will hold off on that for a while.

I picked up Vazquez, Carlos Zambrano, Livan Hernandez, Santana, and José Contreras. After the first two, I was like 'damn, I'm just going to go for the All-Hispanic team', none of them are really 'bad' and I'm not really disappointed in any of them. Should be plenty of K...if I could only get Riviera too!!!

God bless racist rednecks!! (or not)

Not sure what you mean, jonny. I'm not sure that his comment was racist, he was just noting that all those pitchers are from spanish speaking countries. Here's a note on the term "hispanic" from dictionary.com. Way to get off topic guys:

Usage Note: Though often used interchangeably in American English, Hispanic and Latino are not identical terms, and in certain contexts the choice between them can be significant. Hispanic, from the Latin word for “Spain,” has the broader reference, potentially encompassing all Spanish-speaking peoples in both hemispheres and emphasizing the common denominator of language among communities that sometimes have little else in common. Latinowhich in Spanish means "Latin" but which as an English word is probably a shortening of the Spanish word latinoamericanorefers more exclusively to persons or communities of Latin American origin. Of the two, only Hispanic can be used in referring to Spain and its history and culture; a native of Spain residing in the United States is a Hispanic, not a Latino, and one cannot substitute Latino in the phrase the Hispanic influence on native Mexican cultures without garbling the meaning. In practice, however, this distinction is of little significance when referring to residents of the United States, most of whom are of Latin American origin and can theoretically be called by either word. ·A more important distinction concerns the sociopolitical rift that has opened between Latino and Hispanic in American usage. For a certain segment of the Spanish-speaking population, Latino is a term of ethnic pride and Hispanic a label that borders on the offensive. According to this view, Hispanic lacks the authenticity and cultural resonance of Latino, with its Spanish sound and its ability to show the feminine form Latina when used of women. Furthermore, Hispanicthe term used by the U.S. Census Bureau and other government agenciesis said to bear the stamp of an Anglo establishment far removed from the concerns of the Spanish-speaking community. While these views are strongly held by some, they are by no means universal, and the division in usage seems as related to geography as it is to politics, with Latino widely preferred in California and Hispanic the more usual term in Florida and Texas. Even in these regions, however, usage is often mixed, and it is not uncommon to find both terms used by the same writer or speaker.